Thursday, April 9, 2026
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Home Uncategorized US Gas Prices Near Record Highs as Iran Ceasefire Raises Hopes But Analysts Warn Full Energy Relief Is Weeks Away

US Gas Prices Near Record Highs as Iran Ceasefire Raises Hopes But Analysts Warn Full Energy Relief Is Weeks Away

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American drivers hoping for immediate relief at the pump following the US-Iran ceasefire announcement may be disappointed in the near term, as energy economists and industry analysts warn that restoring normal oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz will be a complex, weeks-long process even if the two-week ceasefire holds. The average price of regular unleaded gasoline in the United States stood at $4.14 per gallon as of Wednesday, April 8, the highest level since 2022, with diesel at $5.64 per gallon nearing its all-time record.

Oil prices did plunge dramatically overnight following Trump’s ceasefire announcement, with Brent crude falling more than 15 percent and US crude dropping below $95 per barrel from a Tuesday high of $117. But analysts quickly pointed out that even these sharply lower prices remain over 70 percent above the approximately $67 per barrel level at which crude was trading before the conflict erupted in late February.

The fundamental challenge is logistical. Marine traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has been largely halted since early March, and restarting it requires more than political will. Tanker insurance policies were suspended across most major underwriters during the conflict and must be renegotiated. Shipping companies will need confidence that Iranian coordination of traffic is predictable and safe before committing vessels worth hundreds of millions of dollars to the route. Energy analysts at Jefferies estimate this process will take at minimum several days, more likely weeks.

Iran’s ceasefire statement added a complicating condition, specifying that safe passage will occur ‘via coordination with Iran’s Armed Forces,’ a provision that effectively gives Tehran control over which tankers move through the strait and on what schedule. GasBuddy petroleum analyst Patrick De Haan wrote on social media that the ceasefire likely means ‘another two weeks of status quo’ for oil flows, which would keep downward pressure on prices limited.

The Energy Information Administration had, before the ceasefire, projected US gasoline prices peaking at $4.30 per gallon this month. That forecast may now shift depending on how quickly actual shipping resumes. The EIA also warned that even after the war ends, Middle Eastern oil production is unlikely to return to pre-conflict levels until late 2026, due to infrastructure damage in the region.

For American consumers, the ceasefire is psychologically significant but functionally incomplete. Airlines have already raised fees to cover record jet fuel costs. Trucking companies have added surcharges that are flowing through to consumer goods prices. The Federal Reserve will be watching energy data carefully as it weighs whether the war-driven inflation spike requires a policy response. The next two weeks of Iran-US negotiations in Islamabad are now as consequential for American wallets as they are for Middle Eastern geopolitics.

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